The role of the kidneys in homeostasis – WJECThe kidneys
Our kidneys regulate the water concentration in our blood and excrete toxic waste. When they fail to work properly, dialysis treatment or a transplant is required.
The kidneys are located in the back of the abdomen and have two important functions in the body:
they regulate the water content in the blood
they excrete/remove the toxic waste products of metabolism
The excretory system – structure and function
Blood is brought to the kidney in the renal arteryThe renal artery carries blood to the kidneys. which branches off the aortaMain artery which carries oxygenated blood from the heart in mammals..
The kidney regulates/controls the water and salt content and removes ureaA nitrogenous waste product resulting from the breakdown of proteins. It is excreted in urine..
The filtered excess water, salts and urea form a liquid called urineThe waste product secreted by the kidneys..
The urine is transported to the bladderThe organ that collects urine as it is produced by the kidneys, and releases it when an animal urinates. along tubes called ureterThe tube leading from the kidney to the bladder..
The bladder stores the urine until it is convenient to expel it from the body through the urethra.
The purified blood returns to the circulation through the renal veinThe renal vein takes blood away from the kidneys. and to the heart through the vena cavaOne of the two veins that carries deoxygenated blood to the heart from the body systems..
The kidney
This diagram shows where the renal artery enters the kidney, and where the renal vein leaves.
The kidney is packed with around a million structures called nephronFiltration unit of the kidney, also called a kidney tubule.. These nephrons start in the cortex of the kidney and loop down into the medulla and back to the cortex.
The nephron regulates the level of water, and salts and removes urea from the blood.